Species Marsilea farinosa
Pictures from Observations
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Range:
Location unknown
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Etymology of Marsilea:
For Luigi Ferdinando Marsigli (Marsili) (1658–1730), Italian botanist, naturalist, soldier, military engineer, surveyor and author of over 20 publications. He collected a vast amount of scientific information, specimens, antiquities, fossils, instruments, artefacts of flora and fauna etc., which he gave to the senate of Bologna, and founded the Institute of Sciences and Arts (1712). He travelled extensively in Europe, mapping the 850-kilometres-long Hapsburg-Ottoman border, did scientific research on the Danube River written up in Danubius Pannonico-mysicus (1726) and studied the nature of the seas from Marseilles, France, publishing Histoire Physique de la Mer (1725). He was a foreign associate of the Paris Academy of Sciences and a Fellow of the Royal Society of London and of Montpellier.
Etymology of farinosa:
From the Latin farinosus meaning 'mealy or powdery'
Scientific name:
Marsilea farinosa Launert
Localities:
Synonym of:
Unknown
Long etymology:
Synonym status:
Observations of Taxon
Marsilea farinosa
Locality:
Name of observer:
CE van Ginkel or CJ Cilliers (David)
Date observed:
Date observed unknown
Marsilea farinosa subsp. arrecta
Name of observer:
N Crouch, R Klopper, J & S Burrows (David)
Date observed:
Date observed unknown
Marsilea farinosa subsp. arrecta
Name of observer:
N Crouch, R Klopper, J & S Burrows (David)
Date observed:
Date observed unknown
Marsilea farinosa
Name of observer:
N Crouch, R Klopper, J & S Burrows (David)
Date observed:
Date observed unknown
Marsilea farinosa
Name of observer:
N Crouch, R Klopper, J & S Burrows (David)
Date observed:
Date observed unknown